125 A. 628 | Conn. | 1924
The only question before us is whether, under the standard form of fire insurance policy, "a debt is due" from the underwriter to the insured, within the meaning of our foreign attachment statute, § 5915 of the General Statutes, after a loss by fire covered by the policy, and before proofs of loss are filed. It is not surprising that there should be a conflict of authority among the several States as to the validity of a garnishment made under such circumstances, because of the wide differences of statutory policy respecting attachments in general. See 28 Corpus Juris, p. 165, § 207.
Our own liberal policy with regard to the use of attachments, has naturally led this court to construe the word "due," in our foreign attachment statute, in the sense of "owing," rather than in the more restricted sense of "payable"; and of the many decisions *336
to this effect we are of opinion that Knox v. ProtectionIns. Co.,
The Knox case has been often cited in support of the rule, now firmly established, that a debt is "due" when it is owed, though not yet payable because not yet liquidated in amount. New Haven Steam Saw MillCo. v. Fowler,
In the standard form of fire insurance policy, the required process of liquidating the loss is minutely specified with reference to protecting the company against excessive or fraudulent claims; and the filing of proofs of loss by the insured is one step in that process. A failure to do so within the time limited may bar the enforcement of the underwriter's obligation, because it is so agreed in the policy; but the obligation itself is manifestly created by the promise to pay in case of a loss by fire, and by the happening of that contingency. The steps which the insured is required by the policy to take before he can collect or sue for the loss, relate to matters the performance of which is exclusively within the volition of the insured. In effect, he is required to furnish a bill of particulars in support of his claim. This is not with a view to creating a debt; on the contrary, the filing of proof of loss necessarily involves the assertion by the insured of the existence of an antecedent debt. So the provisions of the policy requiring the filing of proofs of loss, tacitly assume the existence of an obligation to indemnify. The whole procedure after the loss, is for the purpose of finding out whether the claimed obligation to indemnify has arisen, and, if so, to ascertain its amount.
The agreement that the loss shall not become payable until sixty days after the insured has performed his part in the process of investigation and liquidation, is in form and in substance entirely consistent with the existence of an obligation to pay the loss so in process *339
of investigation and liquidation. By virtue of that agreement, a default by the insured will prevent the loss from becoming payable, and so it may be said that compliance with the requirements referred to is a condition precedent to the right to payment and, therefore, to an enforceable liability to pay. Harris
v. Phoenix Ins. Co.,
In Northwestern Ins. Co. v. Atkins, 66 Ky. (3 Bush) 328, and Phenix Ins. Co. v. Willis Bro.,
It appears from the finding that the interest of the mortgages has been made to appear, and as the apportionment of the loss among the several defendants is a matter of arithmetic, the case is, as the trial court notes in its memorandum, ready for judgment in case the plaintiff should prevail.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the cause remanded with direction to enter judgment for the plaintiff in accordance with this opinion.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.